World’s FIRST Map of Ancient AFRICA Will Shock You

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The only thing more Bizarre than a Massive network of Lakes, Rivers and even a DENSE FOREST the size of Texas in the middle of the Sahara Desert - Along with numerous cities, settlements and even Castles blanketing virtually the entire region of the Sahara…Is the realization that these Lost 600 year-old maps literally annotate these geological features Several thousand years prior to their modern Scientific discovery. How could they have possibly known of the existence of the Green Sahara 5,000 years before us?

I'm Jimmy Corsetti, and my channel is called Bright Insight.
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*WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE MAPS??*
Or, Tip me on Venmo! @bright_insight

BrightInsight
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One thing I'm kinda surprised of is that the pyramids are not displayed on the map. You'd think that something that big and unique would definitely be on a map from this time.

johnsimpson
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Everytime Jimmy upload I'm just happy that he hasn't been disappeared

skullerz
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This doesn't surprise me because I study old maps and there are many maps that show Africa with no Sahara desert. I think the past is more of a mystery than we know. The more you look at old maps and take them at face value, you can see that the world was a very different place than it is now.

ms.anthropik
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Since you mentioned Mansa Musa, I’ll throw this in. He took over the throne after his predecessor Mohammed Qu took a fleet to sail west to explore the Atlantic. Qu never returned, yet the 15th century Spaniards met some distinctly black tribes in the Caribbean 170 years later. Possible connection?

blackhawkr
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I believe that a great deal of human history is either being hidden or simply undiscovered. We as a species still have a great deal to learn about ourselves.

USMC_Tex_
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Ive always believed that under the Sahara sand dunes there is so much we have yet to discover.

LaLaLonna
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Can you imagine the knowledge lost in the fire of the library of Alexandria? The maps, the books....

DS-pkeh
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The reason this has been kept out of the mainstream is to remove any inference of West African influence in ancient Egypt. Making the Sahara desert seem like an impenetrable barrier, adds Credence to the notion that ancient Egyptians had no relation to west
Africa

Kal
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The reason I love your videos is because they don't claim to have all the answers. Their main purpose is just to make people think outside the box and explore possibilities other than the narrow POV that just gets hammered into people's heads by mainstream history lessons. Thank you for doing what you do.

dontbannme
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In 2010 I travelled to Marroco and we made a tour on camels through the Sahara. The Beduins gave the camels and us water from a whole in the ground. When I asked them about what kind of pit this was, answered that there was a whole river system underground the Sahara and as they passed this knowledge down, they know, where they can find water in the desert and that is why they have until today caravans that they bring from Marroco to Mali.
Maybe this could be an old burried river system, thanks for your fine research on this topic

yangsu
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I found an interesting clue while watching a History Channel Documentary on the Sahara. It stated that every 20 thousand years the Sahara goes from wet to dry, based on the earths wobble. "The Sahara Desert's Scorching Heat, How the Desert was Made (S2, E4) at 26:50. Sorry for the lack of a link. Love the channel man! Keep up the good work!

mrtrypto
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I love how passionate Jimmy is about this subject matter. It makes the video's that much more enjoyable to watch.

dixonite
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It would be cool if we could arrange an expedition to the eye of the Sahara with scientific equipment that could be crowdfunded by fans of the channel or something.

adamjames
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I always thought it was strange that the Egyptian Empire would have founded their empire in a desolate wasteland with nothing but a major waterway/river in the Nile.

Ryan-vlnn
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Jimmy I'm so excited for you man, I just watched a clip of you on history channel explaining all this, Ive been following you for probably 6 or seven years now and I'm just really psyched you're getting the recognition you deserve for your research. Keep at it man

donheady
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Jimmy!! Stoked to see you on The Unexplained! So glad that you’re getting the spotlight and credit for your Richat theories.

histeve
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Last month I re-read the Alchemist, and a detail stuck out to me that my brain had perhaps filtered out every previous read... It mentions clearly that sea-shells can be found in the Sahara, and something to the effect that old wise men know the Sahara was teeming with life and large parts covered in water, yet people have forgotten. Odd to read that in a 'fictional' book published in the late 80s.

ODMA
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Maps are always changing. I am in my 70's and remember the Sahara being much smaller than today. We were taught back then that it was growing larger and it has so they say. We were taught it was about 1/3 smaller than now but no one talks about it. And I even lived in Libya back then at a US air base just outside Tripoli. Each generation seems to be taught something diffrent. I think you are on to something. Keep up the great work sugar.

UtahGmaw
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I am a terraformer working in Egypt on a project to turn the Sahara green. I work as a consultant with landowners who have thousands of sq acres of desert land, and I show them how to terraform it to become grasslands and forests. Based on historical accounts and geological features, we discovered that the southern section of Egypt use to be a huge grassland with huge lakes just 500 years ago. I myself saw mummified cows lined up along a road in the middle of the desert in what was once a grassland during the Roman times. What had happened is that the Nubians (one of the oldest Christian nations ) were taking care of cows in that area and their stewardship was keeping the grasslands alive. But then, after the Arab invasion, the Bedouin tribes attacked the Nubians constantly for hundreds of years, destroying farms and taking people as slaves. This constant assault pushed the Nubians closer to the Nile regions where it was safer. When the Nubians were pushed out of the Lake Toshka area, the cows died off and the grasslands started to die off too. Now, the area is devoid of a single blade of grass (except around the New Lake Toshka shore, fed by over flow from the Nile floods, due to government engineering) . The temperature is almost unbearably hot outside of the Toshka Lake Basin, and there are small sand dunes everywhere. But we are working hard to turn it back into a grassland. Humans created the desert. So we should be the ones to fix it

johnathanmagliari